| Literature DB >> 31213445 |
Deborah M Broadbent1,2, Christopher J Sampson3, Amu Wang1, Lola Howard4, Abigail E Williams4, Susan U Howlin4, Duncan Appelbe4, Tracy Moitt4, Christopher P Cheyne4,5, Mehrdad Mobayen Rahni1, John Kelly6, John Collins6, Marta García-Fiñana4,5, Irene M Stratton7, Marilyn James3, Simon P Harding1,2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Currently, all people with diabetes (PWD) aged 12 years and over in the UK are invited for screening for diabetic retinopathy (DR) annually. Resources are not increasing despite a 5% increase in the numbers of PWD nationwide each year. We describe the rationale, design and methodology for a randomised controlled trial (RCT) evaluating the safety, acceptability and cost-effectiveness of personalised variable-interval risk-based screening for DR. This is the first randomised trial of personalised screening for DR and the largest ophthalmic RCT in the UK. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: PWD attending seven screening clinics in the Liverpool Diabetic Eye Screening Programme were recruited into a single site RCT with a 1:1 allocation to individualised risk-based variable-interval or annual screening intervals. A risk calculation engine developed for the trial estimates the probability that an individual will develop referable disease (screen positive DR) within the next 6, 12 or 24 months using demographic, retinopathy and systemic risk factor data from primary care and screening programme records. Dynamic, secure, real-time data connections have been developed. The primary outcome is attendance for follow-up screening. We will test for equivalence in attendance rates between the two arms. Secondary outcomes are rates and severity of DR, visual outcomes, cost-effectiveness and health-related quality of life. The required sample size was 4460 PWD. Recruitment is complete, and the trial is in follow-up. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Ethical approval was obtained from National Research Ethics Service Committee North West - Preston, reference 14/NW/0034. Results will be presented at international meetings and published in peer-reviewed journals. This pragmatic RCT will inform screening policy in the UK and elsewhere. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN87561257; Pre-results. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: diabetic retinopathy; general diabetes; health economics; health policy; medical ophthalmology; medical retina
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31213445 PMCID: PMC6588999 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-025788
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Inclusion and exclusion criteria in the personalised variable-interval risk-based screening for diabetic retinopathy randomised controlled trial
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
| Adults, young people and children who are aged ≥12 years. | Under age 12 years. |
| Due to be offered an appointment for retinal screening during the recruitment period. | |
| Registered with a participating GP practice. | Are not registered with a participating GP practice. |
| Are included in the study data warehouse (have not opted out). | Have opted out from the study data warehouse. |
| Have no retinopathy or have retinopathy and maculopathy less than the definition of screen positive diabetic retinopathy. | Have screen positive diabetic eye disease or significant other eye disease requiring referral to the HES. |
| Have gradeable digital retinal images in both eyes. | Are ineligible for screening for whatever reason, including having ungradable digital retinal images, which includes patients who have only one eye or an ungradable eye with no visual potential. |
| Give their informed consent for participation. | Do not give consent for participation in the RCT. |
| Are not involved in any trial investigating a treatment aiming at preventing or modifying the development of STDR. | Are involved in any trial investigating a treatment aiming at preventing or modifying the development of STDR. |
GP, general practitioner; HES, hospital eye service; STDR, sight-threatening diabetic retinopathy.
Figure 1Schematic of the ISDR RCT trial design.
Figure 2Data flows. In step 1, data for consented participants are requested from OptoMize, passed to the DW and cleaned prior to storage. In step 2, data are exchanged between the DW and OptoMize (subjects whose risk needs to be calculated are sent to the DW, subjects for whom their risk and therefore recall interval has been calculated is returned to OptoMize for appointment letter generation). In step 3, the participants’ risk is calculated (when all the covariates are available); if randomisation is required, they are then randomised. The data are then stored in the study database and the DW. All processes in steps 1 and 2 involve identifiable data; the processes in step 3 all use pseudanonomised data for security reasons (the trial team with access to the trial database do not have a need to see raw identifiers). Step 1 occurs on a bimonthly period, steps 2 and 3 occur on a daily basis. Under ideal conditions, it takes 3 days for the data to pass through all parts of steps 1 and 2; this is due to an air gap (manual transfer) at step 2 between the DW and the National Health Service systems. CRF, case report form; DW, data warehouse.
Trial intervention diagram
| Procedures | Screening | Baseline | Randomisation | Follow-up schedule | Study completion | Premature discontinuation | |||||
| 6 months* | 12 months* | 18 months* | 24 months* | 30 months* | 36 months* | ||||||
| Signed consent form |
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| Visual acuity (logMar) |
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| Visit questionnaire |
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| QoL questionaire† |
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| Assessment of eligibility criteria |
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| Randomisation |
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| Digital imaging |
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| Acceptability questionnaire |
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*PWD are randomised to two arms. In one arm, individuals attend at 12-month intervals. In the other arm, individuals attend at 6, 12 or 24 monthly intervals.
†The EQ-5D-5L and HUI3 data will be collected on around 700 eligible PWD and repeated at each visit for those individual PWD. Data will be stratified to balance equal numbers of PWD in each arm and representation from all screening sites.
HUI3, Health Utilities Index Mark 3; QoL, quality of life; PWD, people with diabetes.